2017-08-18T05:00:53ZО мировоззрении Афанасия Никитинаhttp://hdl.handle.net/1811/52168
О мировоззрении Афанасия Никитина
Lur'e, Iakov Solomonovich; Лурье, Я. С. [Яков Соломонович]
Lur'e discusses Afanasii Nikitin's "Khozhenie za tri moria," reviewing the critical literature on this work and commenting on why Nikitin may have traveled to India.
Paper sent in to a colloquium on Early Protestantism in Eastern Europe initially conceived by Anne Pennington for the Medieval Study Group.; For a translation of this article, see: Lur'e, Ia., S., “Afanasii Nikitin’s Weltanschaung,” trans., Jana R. Howlett, Polata Knigopisnaia 16 (August 1987): 125-140.; Я. С. [Яков Соломонович] Лурье, Институт русской литературы АН СССР, Ленинград / Ia. S. Lur'e, Institute of Russian Literature, AN SSSR, Leningrad
1987-08-01T00:00:00ZLur'e, Iakov SolomonovichЛурье, Я. С. [Яков Соломонович]Afanasii Nikitin’s Weltanschaunghttp://hdl.handle.net/1811/52167
Afanasii Nikitin’s Weltanschaung
Lur'e, Ia. S. [Iakov Solomonovich]; Лурье, Я. С. [Яков Соломонович]
This is a translation of the article by Ia. S. Lur'e, "O мировоззрении Афанасия Никитина," which appears in Polata knigopisnaia 16 (August 1987): 94-111. Lur'e discusses the critical literature on Nikitin and his "Khozhenie za tri moria" or "Voyage beyond Three Seas."
Paper sent in to a colloquium on Early Protestantism in Eastern Europe initially conceived by Anne Pennington for the Medieval Study Group.; Jana Howlett, Jesus College, Cambridge, UK; Iakov Solomonovich Lur'e, Institute of Russian Literature, AN SSSR, Leningrad
1987-08-01T00:00:00ZLur'e, Ia. S. [Iakov Solomonovich]Лурье, Я. С. [Яков Соломонович]Reformation or Reformatio: The Case of Muscovite Russiahttp://hdl.handle.net/1811/52166
Reformation or Reformatio: The Case of Muscovite Russia
Howlett, Jana R
The history of early European Protestantism is inseparable from the history of the Catholic Church. The movement "reformatio" or reform within the existing framework, preceded the Reformation when Protestant churches finally split away from the church of Rome. In the lands controlled by the grand princes of Moscow anti-Catholicism ‒ and later anti-Protestantism ‒ was part of the official ideology of both church and state. Yet, judging from histories of Russian thought in this period, the Reformation did not pass Russia by. According to a theory first argued in the works of la. S. Lur'e and expanded by A. I. Klibanov, outbreaks of heresy in Russia's major cities between the fourteenth and sixteenth centuries were not sporadic, but links in a continuous chain of “opposition to the church and therefore the whole of the ruling class.” This was Russia’s own Reformation movement, which expressed the discontent of Russia's poorer gentry and nascent bourgeoisie and found expression in ideas parallel to, though independent of, Reformation thought in the West. The view that Russia had a Reformation movement was and remains influential though it has been the subject of debate. This paper aims to contribute to this debate by reconsidering some of the arguments. Polata 16:141.
Paper presented at a colloquium on Early Protestantism in Eastern Europe initially conceived by Anne Pennington for the Medieval Study Group.
1987-08-01T00:00:00ZHowlett, Jana RDer Fremdsprachenunterricht in der Frühzeit des Peterburger Akademie- Gymnasiumshttp://hdl.handle.net/1811/52164
Der Fremdsprachenunterricht in der Frühzeit des Peterburger Akademie- Gymnasiums
Keipert, Helmut
This article looks at the foreign language teaching at the St. Petersburg Academy-Gymnasium in terms of foreign language books translated and made available in Russia in the 18th century, e.g., polyglot Latin dictionaries, etc.
Helmut Keipert, Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms Universität Bonn; Paper presented at a colloquium on Early Protestantism in Eastern Europe initially conceived by Anne Pennington for the Medieval Study Group.
1987-08-01T00:00:00ZKeipert, HelmutThe Calvinist Bukvar' of Trinity College Dublinhttp://hdl.handle.net/1811/52113
The Calvinist Bukvar' of Trinity College Dublin
Roberts, Christophen
One of the two Slavonic manuscripts in Trinity College Library in Dublin, Ireland, is an East Slavonic bukvar' or reading primer. Roberts gives a brief description of the manuscript, examining in particular the Russian Church Slavonic translations of the Belgic Confession and an abbreviated form of the Heidelberg Cathechism. He points to Old Believer influence in the translated text.
Paper presented at a colloquium on Early Protestantism in Eastern Europe initially conceived by Anne Pennington for the Medieval Study Group.; Christopher Roberts, Trinity College Dublin
1987-08-01T00:00:00ZRoberts, ChristophenThe Transmission of Wycliffite Texts to Bohemiahttp://hdl.handle.net/1811/52112
The Transmission of Wycliffite Texts to Bohemia
Hudson, Anne
Wycliffe's teaching remained influential in England right up to the Reformation, Wycliffe's most apparent success in the sixty years after his death was far from his native land within the 'coasts of Bohemia'.... The dominant ethnic group at the Charles University in Prague were the Germans who were for the most part confirmed nominalists. The adoption by the Czechs of Wycliffe's realism was evidently the more ardent because it demonstrated their hostility to the Germans. The texts which travelled from England to Bohemia were well cherished in their new home, better far than they were in their native land. Polata 16: 83, 90.
Anne Hudson, Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford University; Paper presented at a colloquium on Early Protestantism in Eastern Europe initially conceived by Anne Pennington for the Medieval Study Group.
1987-08-01T00:00:00ZHudson, AnneThe Reformation and the Development of Polish Literature and Polish Printinghttp://hdl.handle.net/1811/52106
The Reformation and the Development of Polish Literature and Polish Printing
Buchwald Pelcowa, Paulina; Pelc, Janusz
The authors discuss the role of the Reformation in the history of Polish literature and printing, first commenting on earlier writers. "The Reformation played a very important role in the development of various important sections of literature in the Polish language. The most important thing was the preparation of the translations of the Bible although this task was difficult and was only implemented in stages. Of similar importance, however, were attempts to write the songs which were to serve the people in the service of the new Christian religions. Last but not least were the many polemical works, echoing the discussions of those who were fighting against the defendants of the Catholic church and the Papacy; these were written mainly in the form of dialogues and treatises, deliberations, orations, etc. In Poland, in order to oppose the supporters of the Reformation, the supporters of the Roman Catholic Church also began to write in Polish. However, in this struggle, polemic and exegetic works were not enough. The reply to the Reformed translations of the Bible into Polish was the preparation of Polish Catholic translation." Polata 16: 59.
Paulina Buchwald Pelcowa and Janusz Pelc, Uniwersytet Warszawski; Paper presented at a colloquium on Early Protestantism in Eastern Europe initially conceived by Anne Pennington for the Medieval Study Group.
1987-08-01T00:00:00ZBuchwald Pelcowa, PaulinaPelc, JanuszProtestantism and the Development of the Polish Languagehttp://hdl.handle.net/1811/52105
Protestantism and the Development of the Polish Language
Szymczak, Mieczsław
Szymczak looks at "how the Protestant movement affected the development of the Polish language. The Polish Renaissance was a time of the discovery of the world and man; language had to keep up with this development of thought and culture. Language played an especially important part in the struggle to realize the ideas of the Reformation. It participated in a decisive way in the forming of social consciousness. But at the same time it underwent a process of integration and normalization. This was because socially established meanings of words are necessary for the conveying of a message, hence the social demand for a common national Polish literary language." Polata 16: 48.
Mieczsław Szymczak, Uniwersytet Warszawski; Paper presented at a colloquium on Early Protestantism in Eastern Europe initially conceived by Anne Pennington for the Medieval Study Group.
1987-08-01T00:00:00ZSzymczak, MieczsławPolnische Reformation als geistige Bewegunghttp://hdl.handle.net/1811/52104
Polnische Reformation als geistige Bewegung
Tazbir, Janusz
Tazbir discusses how the Reformation movement had a much stronger influence on the development of Polish socio-political thought than on theology, and how it did more to affect cultural change than contribute to the development of religious life.
Janusz Tazbir, Uniwersytet Warszawski; Paper presented at a colloquium on Early Protestantism in Eastern Europe initially conceived by Anne Pennington for the Medieval Study Group.
1987-08-01T00:00:00ZTazbir, JanuszThe Lutheranization in Karelia and Ingermanlandhttp://hdl.handle.net/1811/52103
The Lutheranization in Karelia and Ingermanland
Sjöberg, Anders
Sjöberg looks at the Lutheranization of Karelia and Ingermanland where "Lutheran Protestantism largely lacked the support of the people but was introduced through political decisions.... [T]he historical background of the question of Protestantism in these areas at this time is of course the confrontation between Swedish and Russian expansionist aspirations in this northern part of Europe." Polata 16: 26.
Anders Sjöberg, Stockholms Universitet; Paper presented at a colloquium on Early Protestantism in Eastern Europe initially conceived by Anne Pennington for the Medieval Study Group.
1987-08-01T00:00:00ZSjöberg, AndersMartin Luther und das frühe baltische Schrifttumhttp://hdl.handle.net/1811/52102
Martin Luther und das frühe baltische Schrifttum
Eckert, Rainer
Eckert discusses the influence of Martin Luther on the development of early Baltic literature: Old Prussian, Old Lithuanian, Old Latvian - largely in terms of the catechisms published and the works of early reformers, e.g., Abraomas Kulvietis (Abraham Culvensis) and Stanslovas Rapalionis; also Martynas Mažvydas, Jonas Bretkūnas et al.
Rainer Eckert, Humboldt Universität, Berlin; Paper presented at a colloquium on Early Protestantism in Eastern Europe initially conceived by Anne Pennington for the Medieval Study Group.
1987-08-01T00:00:00ZEckert, RainerCover and Table of Contentshttp://hdl.handle.net/1811/52087
Cover and Table of Contents
Veder, William R.; Capaldo, Mario; Du Feu, Veronica
Editors of Polata knigopisnaia include Mario Capaldo, Via Malpighi 12A, Rome, Italy, and William R. Veder, Katholieke Universiteit, Nijmege, Holland. This issue is edited by Veronica Du Feu, University of East Anglie, Norwich, UK.; Papers presented at a colloquium on Early Protestantism in Eastern Europe initially conceived by Anne Pennington for the Medieval Study Group.
1987-08-01T00:00:00ZVeder, William R.Capaldo, MarioDu Feu, VeronicaEarly Protestantism in Eastern Europe: Introductionhttp://hdl.handle.net/1811/52086
Early Protestantism in Eastern Europe: Introduction
Du Feu, Veronica
Description of the colloquium, Early Protestantism in Eastern Europe, where the papers in this of Polata Knigopisnaia were first read. Speakers and their topics are summarized. Brief bibliography included.
Veronica Du Feu, University of East Anglia, Norwich, UK; Paper presented at a colloquium on Early Protestantism in Eastern Europe initially conceived by Anne Pennington for the Medieval Study Group.
1987-08-01T00:00:00ZDu Feu, Veronica